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What’s the story behind tying red cloth on trees at temples

ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jul 30, 2025, 14:50 IST
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What’s the story behind tying red cloth on trees at temples

In many corners of India, faith doesn’t always have to scream. Sometimes, it shows up as a simple strip of red cloth tied gently around the trunk of a tree. It doesn’t seem like much. But for someone, it carries a prayer. A hope. A conversation with the divine.
Red, in our tradition, is sacred. It speaks of Shakti — the energy that creates, protects, and transforms. You’ll find it in bridal sarees, temple threads, and sacred kumkum. But it’s not just color. It’s a feeling. A force. And sometimes, it becomes a soft, fluttering flag tied to something that’s alive.

2/5

When trees become listeners

Walk through an old temple courtyard or a forest shrine, and you’ll notice it. A peepal tree wrapped in layers of red. Cloth faded by sun and time. Each one tied with care, each one holding something — a whispered request, a silent thank you, maybe a longing too tender to name aloud. The tree becomes more than a tree. It becomes a listener. A keeper of secrets. A bridge between earth and sky.

3/5

The Goddess who bleeds

At the Kamakhya Temple in Assam, the ritual assumes a deeper significance. Once a year, the goddess rests. It’s her time of bleeding, and the temple closes its doors in respect. This isn’t shame. It’s a celebration. Of fertility. Of creation. Of the wild, powerful, unapologetic force that is womanhood. During this time, devotees wrap red cloth — Rakta Bastra — around trees near the temple. It’s not just an offering. It’s reverence. It’s a way of saying: “We see you. We honor this cycle. We honor life.”

4/5

A cloth, tied with hope

For many women, this ritual is deeply personal. A cloth tied with hope for a child. Or for healing. Or simply for the courage to carry on. It’s not grand. But it’s real. No priest is needed. No mantras required. Just faith. And a tree that’s stood long enough to understand longing.

5/5

The sacred bond that stays

Over time, the cloth frays. The wind tugs at it. Rain soaks it. But the prayer remains. In the bark. In the leaves. In the space between the human and the divine. And maybe that’s the quiet beauty of it — that something as soft as fabric can carry something as strong as belief.

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